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You’ve read Goodnight Moon and  Hop on Pop at least a hundred times.  Expand the literacy experience with these fun hands-on activities.

Tools to help your pre-reader become a confident and successful reader.

ELEMENTS OF READING

LITERACY TERMS

lANGUAGE-RICH CLASSROOM

stretcH the story

“Children are made readers on the laps of their parents.”

-Emilie Buchwald

 

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A LANGUAGE-RICH CLASSROOM

A Love for Books...
Do you?

  • Read to the children in your class every day?

  • Let the children take books home from the classroom literacy area?

  • Find ways to encourage parents to read to their child at home?

  • Give children time each day to look at books independently or with a friend?

  • Encourage children to actively participate in read-aloud time through discussion and role-playing?

  • Link books with activities to further stretch the learning experience?

Classroom Literacy Area
Do you...
  • Place books where children can easily reach them?

  • Display books on open shelves to call attention to featured books?

  • Store books by category (e.g., animals, bugs, vehicles, etc.) in bins with either a label or a color code?

  • Rotate featured books on a monthly basis to pique children's interest in reading?

  • Have a cozy, inviting area for children to read on their own or with friends?

Phonemic Awareness
Do you...
  • Read and reread stories that have predictable sound patterns?

  • Sing, rhyme, and clap out the syllables of songs and chants?

  • Stretch words out so the children hear the sounds?

  • Play a variety of games that emphasize rhyming and beginning sounds?

  • Use words and songs in the daily classroom routine?

  • Help children identify rhyming words?

Letters and Words
Do you...
  • Read alphabet books to help children recognize the letters in print and learn the names of the letters?

  • Write and display children's names and any other words of interest?

  • Help children recognize and write their own name in print?

  • Involve children in writing activities?

  • Make paper, pencils, and markers easily accessible?

Knowledge of Print
Do you...

  • Show children how to hold a book properly?

  • Show children that we read print moving from left to right and top to bottom?

  • Identify the features of a book, such as the author, illustrator, and title?

  • Teach children the difference between a letter, a word, and a sentence?

  • Draw attention to uppercase and lowercase letters, punctuation, and other print features?

Types of Literature
Do you...
  • Have at least 10 alphabet books in your collection?

  • Have a wide variety of picture storybooks including Caldecott Medal winners?

  • Have a collection of traditional literature such as nursery rhymes, folk tales, and fairy tales?

  • Have poetry included in your collection?

  • Have several informational books or texts like menus, signs, newspapers, greeting cards, recipes, etc., available for children to explore?

  • Have a few big books on hand to allow children to more easily see the pictures and follow the print as it is being read?

 

 

 
         
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